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C‐terminal domain of SARS‐CoV main protease can form a 3D domain‐swapped dimer
Authors:Nan Zhong  Shengnan Zhang  Fei Xue  Xue Kang  Peng Zou  Jiaxuan Chen  Chao Liang  Zihe Rao  Changwen Jin  Zhiyong Lou  Bin Xia
Institution:1. Beijing Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Center, Peking University, Beijing 100871, People' Republic of China;2. College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, People' Republic of China;3. Nan Zhong, Shengnan Zhang, and Fei Xue authors contributed equally to the work.;4. Structural Biology Laboratory, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China;5. College of Life Science, Peking University, Beijing 100871, People' Republic of China
Abstract:SARS coronavirus main protease (Mpro) plays an essential role in the extensive proteolytic processing of the viral polyproteins (pp1a and pp1ab), and it is an important target for anti-SARS drug development. We have reported that both the Mpro C-terminal domain alone (Mpro-C) and the N-finger deletion mutant of Mpro (Mpro-Δ7) exist as a stable dimer and a stable monomer (Zhong et al., J Virol 2008; 82:4227-4234). Here, we report structures of both Mpro-C monomer and dimer. The structure of the Mpro-C monomer is almost identical to that of the C-terminal domain in the crystal structure of Mpro. Interestingly, the Mpro-C dimer structure is characterized by 3D domain-swapping, in which the first helices of the two protomers are interchanged and each is enwrapped by four other helices from the other protomer. Each folding subunit of the Mpro-C domain-swapped dimer still has the same general fold as that of the Mpro-C monomer. This special dimerization elucidates the structural basis for the observation that there is no exchange between monomeric and dimeric forms of Mpro-C and Mpro-Δ7.
Keywords:SARS  main protease  domain‐swapping  dimerization  C‐terminal domain
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